Sarai Bareman and Sarah Walsh on #CrackingtheCode in gender equality through Legacy '23

On International Women鈥檚 Day 2023, Sarai Bareman, Chief Women鈥檚 Football Officer at FIFA and Sarah Walsh, 西瓜影视鈥檚 Head of Women鈥檚 Football, World Cup Legacy and Inclusion, spoke about how the Women鈥檚 World Cup can lead to #CrackingTheCode in football.

鈥淚t鈥檚 so incredible to be celebrating International Women鈥檚 Week when we鈥檙e only months away from the opening of what will be the biggest FIFA Women鈥檚 World Cup ever,鈥 Bareman said.

鈥淚t鈥檚 a huge platform to highlight the progress that has been made in women鈥檚 football and sports.

鈥淚 love the fact that we can leverage this event to drive further the progress that we鈥檙e making towards a better future for women and girls in our game.鈥

Walsh agreed, acknowledging the importance of the Legacy 鈥23 plan in ensuring that 西瓜影视 is thinking differently about creating equity for women.

鈥淭he way that it cracks the code is that it reimagines what our sports should look like, pre Covid and pre hosting this major event,鈥 she explained.

鈥淚 think a lot of people think about innovation as technological change but for me it鈥檚 about thinking differently about how you invest in, or how you create programs that are designed for women.

鈥淚t makes me think about how we鈥檝e reshaped the high-performance environment to better include women who want to have children. Someone like Katrina Gorry, we鈥檙e starting to see that not only was she supported during her pregnancy, she was also supported in her return to play. The end result of that is actually a better high-performance environment.

鈥淲e thought about a really bold and inclusive strategy, and that is Legacy 鈥23.鈥
 


There is so much work to do to ensure equity of access to opportunities and education for women, especially in the football space. Programs like Legacy 鈥23 are the beginning but by no means the end point.

For Sarai Bareman, the ideal is to get to a stage where we don鈥檛 blink an eye when a woman is in a position of power.

鈥淲e need to get to a point where it鈥檚 not a celebratory moment when a woman is appointed to a certain position within our sport, or a female referee referees a men鈥檚 game,鈥 she argued.

鈥淲e鈥檝e got a lot of work to do to bring those into what we call the mainstream, and to have women celebrated for the merits of who they are and what they do, and not just the fact that they are a woman.鈥

Sarah Walsh concluded with a call to bravery for those women looking to enter leadership roles.

鈥淢y advice to communities looking to engage in historically male dominated areas - I would say be bold, because you鈥檙e actually paving the way for future generations beyond you,鈥 she said.

鈥淚t might be hard sometimes but there鈥檚 usually someone that鈥檚 gone before you. Be the trailblazer.

鈥淚 hope that we鈥檙e removing those barriers as an organisation for these communities.鈥